Where does life truly begin?
In the smallest microbe... or in the hand of a Creator?
We've learned how the body works.
We've mapped cells, systems, and the patterns of life itself.
But the more we understand, the more one question lingers quietly underneath everything:
Why does knowing so much still leave something unanswered?
Science and the Sacred: Reflections on Life, Knowledge, and God's Design is not a textbook, and it is not a sermon.
It comes from lived moments-caregiving, observation, silence, and those ordinary days where something small suddenly feels heavier than explanation.
It sits in the space between certainty and wonder.
Science explains how life functions.
Faith tries to speak to why it matters.
And sometimes, instead of arguing, both simply exist side by side-unfinished, but honest.
This book doesn't try to resolve the tension between science and belief.
It simply reflects it.
For readers who have ever stood between logic and faith, or felt that understanding the world still doesn't fully explain it-this is a quiet invitation to pause with those questions a little longer.
Not to choose a side.
But to notice what the question itself reveals.